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Adam Carter wrote:
Does that info help?
My reason for asking is that i'm seeing this across multiple systems,
2 AMD, 1 Intel, who's configuration hasn't really changed and while
there is some variance there has been a step change late December /
early January. Another example
Sat Nov 26 14:34:50 2022 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.2
merge time: 2 minutes and 19 seconds.
Sat Dec 10 20:59:29 2022 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.3
merge time: 1 minute and 54 seconds.
Wed Dec 14 13:56:52 2022 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.3
merge time: 2 minutes and 56 seconds.
Wed Dec 21 20:08:36 2022 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.4
merge time: 3 minutes and 7 seconds.
Tue Jan 3 22:29:43 2023 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.4
merge time: 12 minutes and 42 seconds.
Thu Jan 12 14:56:32 2023 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.4-r1
merge time: 22 minutes and 12 seconds.
Sat Jan 21 12:00:06 2023 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.4-r1
merge time: 12 minutes and 3 seconds.
Mon Jan 30 15:41:44 2023 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.5
merge time: 21 minutes and 45 seconds.
Fri Feb 17 21:18:21 2023 >>> sys-apps/systemd-252.6
merge time: 22 minutes and 18 seconds.
The ones I listed before also jumped in compile times. As I said tho, I
don't know if other things compiling affected that time. Still, it does
seem to have increased but I remember when I was on my old single core
rig with just a few GBs of memory. As time goes by, software gets
bigger therefore takes longer to compile. Yours from the 4th to the 6th
in the list sure does increase. That's 8 to 10 times longer roughly.
That's a large difference. A true test, emerge something interesting
all by itself. See what it comes closest to, the old times or the newer
and longer times.
I suspect this is changes in features of software and could even be
related to gcc or some other tool compiling uses. It is a interesting
jump. I don't think you are alone in this. Maybe someone else will
post their info. For those interested, genlop -t <package name> is how
to get this info.
BTW, I don't use systemd so I can't list mine. ;-)
Dale
:-) :-)
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">Adam Carter wrote:<br>
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[email protected]">
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Does that info help? <br>
<br>
</blockquote>
<div><br>
</div>
<div>My reason for asking is that i'm seeing this across
multiple systems, 2 AMD, 1 Intel, who's configuration hasn't
really changed and while there is some variance there has
been a step change late December / early January. Another
example</div>
<div><br>
</div>
<div> Sat Nov 26 14:34:50 2022 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.2<br>
merge time: 2 minutes and 19 seconds.<br>
<br>
Sat Dec 10 20:59:29 2022 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.3<br>
merge time: 1 minute and 54 seconds.<br>
<br>
Wed Dec 14 13:56:52 2022 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.3<br>
merge time: 2 minutes and 56 seconds.<br>
<br>
Wed Dec 21 20:08:36 2022 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.4<br>
merge time: 3 minutes and 7 seconds.<br>
<br>
Tue Jan 3 22:29:43 2023 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.4<br>
merge time: 12 minutes and 42 seconds.<br>
<br>
Thu Jan 12 14:56:32 2023 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.4-r1<br>
merge time: 22 minutes and 12 seconds.<br>
<br>
Sat Jan 21 12:00:06 2023 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.4-r1<br>
merge time: 12 minutes and 3 seconds.<br>
<br>
Mon Jan 30 15:41:44 2023 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.5<br>
merge time: 21 minutes and 45 seconds.<br>
<br>
Fri Feb 17 21:18:21 2023 >>>
sys-apps/systemd-252.6<br>
merge time: 22 minutes and 18 seconds.<br>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<br>
<br>
The ones I listed before also jumped in compile times. As I said
tho, I don't know if other things compiling affected that time.
Still, it does seem to have increased but I remember when I was on
my old single core rig with just a few GBs of memory. As time goes
by, software gets bigger therefore takes longer to compile. Yours
from the 4th to the 6th in the list sure does increase. That's 8 to
10 times longer roughly. That's a large difference. A true test,
emerge something interesting all by itself. See what it comes
closest to, the old times or the newer and longer times. <br>
<br>
I suspect this is changes in features of software and could even be
related to gcc or some other tool compiling uses. It is a
interesting jump. I don't think you are alone in this. Maybe
someone else will post their info. For those interested, genlop -t
<package name> is how to get this info. <br>
<br>
BTW, I don't use systemd so I can't list mine. ;-) <br>
<br>
Dale <br>
<br>
:-) :-) <br>
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